msphpsql/buildscripts
Jenny Tam 64e8ddc855
Use VS2019 for php 8 in Windows in the build scripts (#1149)
2020-07-07 11:31:16 -07:00
..
README.md Removed source indexing code from build scripts (#1132) 2020-05-04 11:52:58 -07:00
builddrivers.py Removed source indexing code from build scripts (#1132) 2020-05-04 11:52:58 -07:00
buildtools.py Use VS2019 for php 8 in Windows in the build scripts (#1149) 2020-07-07 11:31:16 -07:00
indexsymbols.py Added source indexing for symbols (#922) 2019-02-06 15:57:52 -08:00

README.md

Windows

Prerequisites

To build extensions for

  1. PHP 7.0* or PHP 7.1*
    • install Visual Studio 2015 and make sure C++ tools are enabled.
  2. PHP 7.2* or above
    • install Visual Studio 2017, including Visual C++ toolset and the Windows SDK components.

To use the sample build scripts builddrivers.py and buildtools.py, install Python 3.x and Git for Windows (which comes with Visual Studio 2017). If git is unrecognized in a regular command prompt, make sure the environment path is set up correctly.

Compile the drivers

You must first be able to build PHP 7.* without including our PHP extensions. For help with building PHP 7.0* or PHP 7.1* in Windows, see the official PHP website. For PHP 7.2 or above, visit PHP SDK page for new instructions.

The Microsoft Drivers for PHP for SQL Server have been compiled and tested with PHP 7.0.* and 7.1.* using Visual C++ 2015 as well as PHP 7.2+ using Visual C++ 2017 v15.*.

Manually building from source

  1. Download the source directory from this repository

  2. Make a copy of the shared folder as a subfolder in sqlsrv and/or pdo_sqlsrv folder

  3. Copy the sqlsrv and/or pdo_sqlsrv folder(s) into the PHP source ext subdirectory

  4. Run buildconf --force to rebuild the configure.js script to include the sqlsrv and/or pdo_sqlsrv driver(s).

  5. Run configure.bat with the desired driver options (as shown below) to generate the makefile. You can run configure.bat --help to see what other options are available. For example, for non-thread safe build, add this option --disable-zts.

    • For SQLSRV add: --enable-sqlsrv=shared
    • For PDO_SQLSRV add: --enable-pdo --with-pdo-sqlsrv=shared
  6. Run nmake. Optionally, you can run nmake clean first.

  7. To install the drivers, there are two ways:

    • Run nmake install, or
    • Copy the drivers:
      • Find the directory where the newly compiled php.exe is
      • Locate the compiled php_sqlsrv.dll and/or php_pdo_sqlsrv.dll
      • Copy the dll(s) to the ext subfolder

Using the sample build scripts

The sample build scripts, builddrivers.py and buildtools.py, can be used to build our extensions for PHP in Windows.

Overview

When asked to provide the PHP version, you should enter values like 7.3.17. If it's alpha, beta, or RC version, make sure the name you provide matches the PHP tag name without the prefix php-. For example, for PHP 7.4 beta 2, the tag name is php-7.4.0beta2, so you will enter 7.4.0beta2. Visit PHP SRC to find the appropriate tag names.

PHP recommends to unzip the PHP SDK into the shortest possible path, preferrably somewhere near the root drive. Therefore, this script will, by default, create a php-sdk folder in the C:\ drive, and this php-sdk directory tree will remain unless you remove it yourself. For ongoing development, we suggest you keep it around. The build scripts will handle updating the PHP SDK if a new version is available.

Steps

  1. Launch a regular cmd prompt

  2. Change to the directory where the Python scripts builddrivers.py and buildtools.py are

  3. Interactive mode:

    • Type py builddrivers.py to start the interactive mode. Use lower cases to answer the following questions:
      • PHP Version
      • 64-bit?
      • Thread safe?
      • Driver?
      • Debug enabled?
      • Download source from GitHub?
    • For yes/no questions, you can simply hit ENTER key for yes. Other questions are self-explanatory.
  4. Use Command-line arguments

    • Type py builddrivers.py -h to get a list of options and their descriptions
    • For example,
      • py builddrivers.py --PHPVER=7.4.5 --ARCH=x64 --THREAD=nts --DRIVER=sqlsrv --SOURCE=C:\local\source
      • py builddrivers.py --PHPVER=7.2.30 --ARCH=x86 --THREAD=ts --DEBUG
  5. Based on the given configuration, if the script detects the presence of the PHP source directory, you can choose whether to rebuild, clean or superclean:

    • rebuild to build again using the same configuration (32 bit, thread safe, etc.)
    • clean to remove previous builds (binaries)
    • superclean to remove the entire php-<version>-src directory, which is often unnecessary
  6. If you choose not to download from a GitHub repository, you will be asked to provide the full path to your local Source folder.

  7. If the compilation is successful, you will be given the option to rebuild or quit.

Troubleshooting

If something went wrong or the build failed, the log file will be launched (you can find the log files in C:\php-sdk). Otherwise, the log file will not be shown, and they remain in C:\php-sdk until you remove them manually.

In addition to the log files in C:\php-sdk, you can examine the contents of C:\php-sdk\phpsdk-build-task.bat, which is overwritten every time you run the build scripts.

Testing mode and/or setting alternative destination

If your main goal is to build the drivers for testing, and/or there is no need to keep the php-sdk directory around, you can invoke py builddrivers.py with the necessary command-line arguments plus --TESTING, which turns on the testing mode (it is False by default).

Setting the testing mode automatically turns off the looping mechanism. When the build is finished, you will find a copy of the drivers (unless the build failed) and the php-sdk folder in the same directory of these Python scripts.

In addition, you can set an alternative destination using --DESTPATH=<some valid path>, which is None by default. Note that these two options are not available in the interactive mode. However, they are particularly useful for testing purposes (such as testing in a virtual machine) in which these build scripts are copied to a temporary folder. After the drivers have been successfully compiled and copied to the designated location, the temporary folder can be safely removed.